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Conspracy of Conscious

Posted in Uncategorized by @honestcharlie on April 27, 2024

THE ABSURD TIMES

Note: he will run as an independent to void the corruption of current parties. His MVP in Women’s Volleyball is an achievement no other Republican Maga managed. The man on the right also has some distinctions.

Self-Defense

Posted in Uncategorized by @honestcharlie on April 16, 2024

RIGHT OF SELF-DEFENSE?

IRAN V. ISRAEL

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APR 16, 2024

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RIGHT TO SELF-DEFENSE

We are a bit late with this, 24 hours in fact, but it takes precedence over what we were working on. It has been quite a cognitive crucifixion not to decide on which way to vote, if at all, but to find any time in the past of our electoral system such a dirth of principle existed in what remains a two-party system. It was taking quite a bit of time and analysis, and all of a sudden Iran elects to “even the score” with a retaliation against Israel. Also, some new buzz-words were still-birthed as well as some surviving ones ridden excessively.

One that seems to have faded is the “deconfliction zone” which refers to when and where people involved will stop attacking one another. A very ominous and insane asylum flock of refugees apparently exists in Israel at the moment. We have established quite clearly that Nitwit Yahoo is slaughtering as many civilians, women, and children as possible in Gaza, but his purpose seemed to be self-preservation, to use his position as a war-time leader as a cloak of immunity in much the same manner as Demented Don is running for President in the U.S. We now hear that many members of his ruling clique are worse and more sadistic and unchecked than even him. They want to kill every Palestinian they can and take over the land. Kushner (yes, the son-in-law of the orange man) has said that Gaza looks like an “excellent beach-front” property. Other members of Neten’s cabinet call Palestinians “animals,” and there are hopes that larger swaths of land in the Golan Heights will be added to the land already bearing the Trump name.

A reasonable Calculus incrementally and tangentially set to zero would make this quadratic linear and … I’m realizing that one needs to use this term with less background, not even Leibnitz meant that.

So what did happen? Well, starting with Israel’s attack on the Iranian consulate in Syria (legally, Iranian soil) several Iranian officials or officers were killed – not clear whether murder, assassination, or war – by Israel (not by its client state’s or organization.) This is the same excess as would be an attack on Teheran. Iran said that it would retaliate. The attack on Iran was April Fool’s Day, and the response was two weeks later.

The response was actually quite stylish and was quite amusing to follow on MSM here in the U.S. It was helpful to stay with one outlet to watch as the story developed. The first thing we heard was that a drone (yes, singular) had been sent from Iran to Israel. If you knew its probable speed and distance, you could estimate that it would be five hours before it reached Israel so that left time to wash the dishes and change, at the very least. All of a sudden, it became 45 and then 100 drones on the way to Zion. What are we going to do?

Well, as we wonder, we learn that after these two hours passed, 100 missiles have been launched and are heading towards Israel at twice the speed of the drones. It is still not Calculus, but the addition is clear. You do it.

Finally, we hear of a lack of warning. Right after the Israeli raid on the Iranian embassy or consulate, Iran said they would retaliate by exercising the right to self-defense. Then the attack was at least five hours (the drones) ahead of time, giving ample time for others to shoot them down. When we first heard of the attack, I was asked how long it would take to land and said “less than 20 minutes”). Well, obviously, I didn’t have all the facts. I had simply believed that they used an ICBM such as we timed during or so exciting games with the Soviet Union. This was hardly that. Let us hope that some degree of sanity returns before Israel increases its pursuit of Lebensraum.

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In previous postings, we mentioned the difficulty in obtaining accurate reporting. One of the places where such is present is in non-corporate, non-profit, public-supported agencies such as DEMOCRACY NOW from whence comes this transcript, DEMOCRACYNOW.ORG:

The Middle East is bracing for the possibility of regional war after Iran responded to Israel’s bombing of the Iranian Consulate in Damascus with a major drone and missile attack Saturday. The attack caused little damage inside Israel, as it intercepted nearly all of the drones and missiles with help from the United States, Britain, France and Jordan. Iran’s government described the attack as a defensive maneuver after Israel’s unprovoked strike on its embassy killed some of Iran’s top military brass. This was “a performative operation to send a message,” says journalist Reza Sayah, who joins us from Tehran. But while Iran “does not want to escalate matters,” Israel may be preparing to do just that. Washington, D.C.-based analyst Trita Parsi says that Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu has been trying to instigate conflict between the U.S. and Iran for “more than two decades,” and given that Biden has demonstrated an unwillingness to “draw any red lines for Israel publicly,” these latest provocations could become a prime “opportunity” for such a war. Crucially, Iranian restraint “cannot last forever,” warns our final roundtable guest, the Israeli journalist Gideon Levy, who touches on both Iran’s own sovereignty and increasing global pressure for Israel to end its war on Gaza. “Gaza is still starving and bleeding, and we shouldn’t forget it,” says Levy.

Transcript

This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.

AMY GOODMAN: The Middle East is bracing for possible retaliation from Israel after Iran launched 300 drones and missiles at Israel in response to Israel’s recent bombing of the Iranian Consulate in Damascus, Syria. The Iranian attack caused little damage inside Israel, which intercepted nearly all the drones and missiles, with help from the United States, Britain, France and Jordan. U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres called for maximum restraint Sunday at an emergency U.N. Security Council meeting.

SECRETARY-GENERAL ANTÓNIO GUTERRES: The Middle East is on the brink. The people of the region are confronting a real danger of a devastating, full-scale conflict. Now is the time to defuse and deescalate. Now is the time for maximum restraint.

AMY GOODMAN: As we broadcast, Israel’s war cabinet is reconvening to debate how to respond to Iran’s first-ever direct attack. Israeli war cabinet member Benny Gantz has vowed Israel will retaliate against Iran.

BENNY GANTZ: [translated] In the face of the Iranian threat, we will build a regional coalition and exact the price from Iran in the fashion and timing that is right for us. And most importantly, faced with the desire of our enemies to harm us, we will continue to unite and become stronger.

AMY GOODMAN: President Biden has reiterated his, quote, “ironclad” support for Israel, but he reportedly told Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that the United States will not participate in any retaliatory strikes against Iran.

At the United Nations Sunday, Iran’s U.N. Ambassador Saeid Iravani defended the missile and drone attack on Israel, saying it was done in self-defense.

SAEID IRAVANI: These countries, especially the United States, have shielded Israel from any responsibility for the Gaza massacre. While they have denied Iran’s inherent right to self-defense against the Israeli armed attack on our diplomatic premises, at the same time they shamefully justify the Israeli massacre and genocide against the defenseless Palestinian people under the pretext of self-defense.

AMY GOODMAN: Iran’s attacks on Israel may add new momentum for the U.S. Congress to approve more aid for Israel as the House returns to session today.

For more, we go to Tehran, where we’re joined by Reza Sayah, freelance journalist based in Tehran, where he joins us from. Trita Parsi is executive vice president of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, joining us from Washington, D.C. And later we’ll speak with Gideon Levy, award-winning Israeli journalist and author in Tel Aviv. He’s columnist for the newspaper Haaretz, a member of its editorial board. His most recent piece is headlined “If Iran Attacks Israel, the Blame Lies on Israel’s Irresponsible Decision-makers.”

We welcome you all to Democracy Now! Reza Sayah, let’s begin with you in Tehran. Can you talk about the response there in Iran’s capital after Iran retaliated against Israel for bombing the Iranian Consulate in Damascus?

REZA SAYAH: Well, the people of Iran have had a variety of responses and sentiments. And I think it’s important to remind everyone that neither myself nor any journalist can sit here and tell you that a population, an entire population, has a single feeling, a single voice, a single sentiment, but this is what you hear oftentimes in Western news media, are journalists describing what an entire population is feeling or saying. That’s simply not the case. There are different competing sentiments in every population, and that is the case here in Iran.

There’s a segment of the population here in Iran that are staunch supporters of the clerical establishment, staunch supporters of the supreme leader. They believe that it’s the duty of every Muslim to support and help the oppressed, and they view Gazans and Palestinians as the oppressed. They’re following very closely the events in Gaza over the past six months. They were outraged when Iran’s Consulate was attacked in Syria. And they cheered Iran’s response over the weekend when they fired those rockets and those drones in Israel. That’s one segment of the population.

There’s another segment of the population in Iran that are staunch critics of the government. They have a very different view. They want reform in the government. Some want the government gone. They don’t mind when senior officials of the Revolutionary Guard are assassinated. They don’t mind when the establishment is undermined, when the Revolutionary Guard is undermined. They believe that the Iranian government, instead of funding Hezbollah and Hamas, should help the people. So they were — they are and they remain critical of Iran’s role in this conflict.

But it’s important to point out that most people here in Iran are, remarkably, continuing their lives. Obviously, some people are worried. They see the headlines. They wonder what’s going to happen. But remarkably, they continue their lives. Schools are open. Stores are open. Businesses are open. And I think that speaks to the resilience of the Iranian people, who’ve faced so many challenges over these last 40-plus years — the isolation, a horrible economy, inflation, a lack of jobs. But somehow they continue living while monitoring what’s happening.

AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about who died in the attack on the Iranian Consulate in Damascus? At least two Iranian generals. Is that right?

REZA SAYAH: Yeah, these were two Iranian generals that had significant roles in Iran’s presence in Syria and the reported operations that Iran has conducted against U.S. targets in the region, in Syria and Iraq. And it’s important to note that many people within the government continue to remind everyone that this was an act of war by Israel, even though Israel has not confirmed that it conducted the attack on the Iranian Consulate. Iran continues to remind the international community — they did it at the U.N. Security Council meeting — that Iran’s attack on Israel was a response to an act of war that Israel carried out against the Iranian Consulate, which is seen as Iranian soil.

It is also important to point out that Iran’s response took two weeks. And that is in line with how Iran has reacted to similar incidents and assassinations in recent years. You’ll recall the assassination of General Soleimani, the top-ranking Revolutionary Guard general, in Iraq in 2020. You’ll recall Iran’s response was to attack a U.S. airbase in Iraq, but just as they did with this attack in Israel, they took a lot of time. It is reported that they even announced what they were going to do. And that’s a clear indication that Iran does not want to escalate matters with Israel and the U.S. and regional allies, that this was, as many say, a performative operation to send a message, and calculated in a way where Iran doesn’t want to escalate matters. And you saw Iranian officials explicitly say that, for them, the matter is over. Now we wait to see if Israel agrees, if it’s over for them, if they retaliate, and what Iran does after that.

AMY GOODMAN: I want to go to John Bolton, Trump’s former national security adviser, interviewed on CNN.

WOLF BLITZER: Give us your assessment of an appropriate Israeli response to what Iran has now done.

JOHN BOLTON: Well, what Iran did tonight that I think was most significant was the firing of ballistic missiles and cruise missiles from its territory directly at Israel. Almost certainly at this point, none of those missiles contained a nuclear warhead. But you never can tell when the next firing, the next salvo of ballistic missiles might contain a nuclear warhead. So, I think among the many targets Israel should consider, this is the opportunity to destroy Iran’s nuclear weapons program. And I hope President Biden is not trying to dissuade Prime Minister Netanyahu from doing that.

AMY GOODMAN: So, that was John Bolton speaking on CNN. We’re also joined by Trita Parsi, executive vice president of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, speaking to us from Washington, D.C. Trita, can you respond to what Bolton said and also how Washington is responding right now?

TRITA PARSI: Well, I think you saw there, in John Bolton’s response, he used the word “opportunity.” And this is how some of the hawks view this. They see this as an opportunity to materialize the war between the United States and Iran and Israel that they have been seeking for more than 25 years. And that includes Bibi Netanyahu. I think it should not be forgotten that Netanyahu has been trying to start a war between the United States and Iran for more than two decades and has seen him being actually rebuffed by several presidents in a row, who may have been very hawkish on Iran, who may themselves have contemplated the idea of going to war with Iran, but who nevertheless rejected the pressure from Netanyahu to do so on behalf of Israel. But Bolton is reflecting that view, the idea that this is an opportunity to have a much larger war in the Middle East.

AMY GOODMAN: And can you talk about President Biden saying that Israel has the “ironclad” support of the U.S., but telling Netanyahu after this attack that the U.S. would not participate in any kind of retaliation, though the U.S. intercepted, I think they said, how many drones and something like six missiles and 90 drone strikes on the — with the Iranian attack? Jordan also participated, as did Britain and France.

TRITA PARSI: I think what Biden is saying here is quite contradictory, because at the end of the day, there will be no distinction between offensive and defensive measures in the second the war actually breaks out. So, consider this scenario. The United States does not support and does not participate in Israel’s counterstrikes against Iran, and the Israelis may follow Bolton’s advice and try to target Iran’s nuclear facilities. The Iranians then respond in kind with a much larger barrage of missiles. Clearly what they did this time around was choreographed to minimize damage and make sure that there’s no casualties. Next time around, they won’t do that. Once the Iranians have started their counterstrikes, then the United States is dragged into the war, because Biden said that he will participate in the defensive measures. And then, regardless of what the previous measure was by the United States, the U.S. will be at war in the Middle East. And as a result, Netanyahu now has a clear pathway on how to drag the United States into this war. All he needs to do is to escalate further. The U.S. will reject that, but then the U.S. will be there once the Iranians are responding. And at that point, any distinction between offensive and defensive is meaningless.

If Biden instead makes it very, very clear that it does not lie in the U.S.’s interest to have any escalation in the region and draws a red line in front of Iran and in front of Israel, he will then not need to come to the defense of Israel, because there will not be a war to begin with. That would be a much better pathway that serves U.S. interests, that prevents any regional escalation. But so far we have seen that Biden, even though he apparently is frustrated privately, he does not feel comfortable to draw any red lines for Israel publicly. And the ones that he has drawn privately, Netanyahu has systematically ignored for the last seven months.

AMY GOODMAN: We’re talking to Trita Parsi, who’s executive vice president of the Quincy Institute, has written several books on Iran and the United States. We’re going to continue with him and Reza Sayah, freelance journalist in Tehran, and we’ll be joined by Gideon Levy, who is Haaretz columnist, on the editorial board of Haaretz, wrote the article “If Iran Attacks Israel, the Blame Lies on Israel’s Irresponsible Decision-makers.” Back in 30 seconds.

[break]

AMY GOODMAN: “Khooneye Ma,” “Our House,” by Marjan Farsad. This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, The War and Peace Report. I’m Amy Goodman.

The Middle East is bracing for Israel to retaliate amidst claims — calls for restraint after Iran fired over 350 drones and missiles at Israel in response to Israel’s attack on the Iranian Consulate in Syria that killed two Iranian generals and a number of other military officers. We are joined by guests in Tehran and Washington, D.C., and now to Tel Aviv, where we’re joined by Gideon Levy, an award-winning Israeli journalist and author, columnist for the newspaper Haaretz and a member of its editorial board, his most recent piece headlined “If Iran Attacks Israel, the Blame Lies on Israel’s Irresponsible Decision-makers.”

In it, Gideon writes, quote, “For several years now, Israel has provoked Iran constantly, in Lebanon, Syria and also on Iranian soil, and has not paid any price. It would be foolish to believe that the rope Israel has stretched will not break. That moment may have come.” He ends by writing, “Just don’t say, again, that there was no choice. There was a choice: not to kill. Even if it is deserved, even if it is permitted and even if it is possible. The person who sent the assassins put Israel at risk of war with Iran.”

Gideon Levy, you are joined — you are joining Reza Sayah, a freelance journalist in Tehran, Iran, and Trita Parsi, one of the heads of the Quincy Institute. Can you respond to Iran’s attack and what Israel did to provoke that, the bombing of the Iranian Consulate in Damascus? Did that surprise you?

GIDEON LEVY: Nothing surprised here. The only thing which surprised, really, was the defensive capability of Israel, together with its allies. It was really impressive. But it’s not a guarantee for the future. When I wrote my article, it was before the attack came. And still I thought that the assassination in Damascus was unnecessary. The problem with the Israeli armed forces and intelligence organizations is that whenever they see an opportunity, they take it, without thinking about the consequences, without thinking about the price. And until now it was working for them, because Iran didn’t react ’til now directly on Israel, only through its proxies. But it was very clear that this cannot last forever.

So, those who send the assassinators to assassinate on Iranian soil, on an Iranian diplomatic mission, those two generals and five more, those had to think what will be the next day. And the next day came, and we were attacked. And luckily enough, we didn’t suffer out of this attack. The only conclusion right now should be: No, don’t you dare to retaliate now, because then we will be in a regional war, and that’s a new game.

AMY GOODMAN: Talk about what Benny Gantz said — as we broadcast right now, the war cabinet, Israel’s war cabinet, has reconvened — what Netanyahu said. Of course, they are competing with each other. If Netanyahu were to go down, it’s perceivable Benny Gantz would become the next prime minister. But talk about what’s happening within that war cabinet.

GIDEON LEVY: Amy, it’s for long time that I claim that those who want to get rid of Netanyahu are obviously right, but the hope that the alternative will be any better on core issues — for many issues it will be much better, but on core issues, like apartheid, the occupation, continuing the war in Gaza, will be very, very disappointed. And here we go. Benny Gantz, who is the alternative, who is the liberal alternative, who is the dovish alternative of Israel, he speaks exactly like Netanyahu and would act exactly like Netanyhau when it comes to core issues or core questions like launching an assassination, like launching a war, like using the military power of Israel. And that’s really very, very depressing that there is no alternative thinking in Israel and no lessons out of the experience. All the assassinations that Israel committed, all of them, never led to anywhere. Nothing good came out of them, except of the ego of the organizations who stood behind it. And here comes this Benny Gantz, the big hope of the liberal Israel, and suggests to continue the war, to make it worse, to go for a regional war with Iran. That’s really, really, very depressing.

AMY GOODMAN: Are you concerned, Gideon Levy, that what’s happening with Iran now is taking attention away from what’s happening in Gaza, where the death toll just continues to mount, over — close to 34,000 people, just the official death toll, is expected to be much higher, and where the resistance was mounting in the United States, for example, on President Biden not to arm Israel, given what’s happening in Gaza, that now the House, which is notoriously divided, is perhaps coming together around giving more aid to Israel?

GIDEON LEVY: It goes without saying, Amy. Not only Gaza is forgotten. Also look what is happening in the West Bank — pogrom after pogrom, and nobody cares anymore. The army collaborates in those pogroms. We have videos from the last days in which the army not only stands aside, but many times take part of those pogroms against the Palestinians. And nobody pays attention to it — not to speak, obviously, about Gaza — because everyone is now concerned about Iran. But Gaza is still starving and bleeding, and we shouldn’t forget it, even not for a moment, like we shouldn’t forget the hostages who are still there. But it seems that now everyone is only concerned about retaliating Iran. This would be such a major, maybe fatal, mistake.

AMY GOODMAN: I wanted to bring back in Reza Sayah. You were based in Cairo, Egypt, when you covered the negotiations between Israel and Hamas in 2014 as Israel launched its assault on Gaza then. Can you talk about what unfolded back then and how it compares to the negotiations that are taking place, what, in Doha and Cairo now for a ceasefire?

REZA SAYAH: Well, obviously, back then, what took place, as is taking place right now on a smaller scale, was the killing of lots of innocent civilians. But one thing that sticks out in my mind in 2014, in covering that conflict, was the Israeli government’s flat-out refusal to negotiate. There were so many instances when I was talking to Hamas leaders who were in Cairo. And in these instances, they would tell me that the Israeli officials who were supposed to show up for those negotiations simply would not show up. And this was something that was not widely reported by Western and U.S. media, the Israeli government’s seeming unwillingness to negotiate with Hamas. Eventually, there was negotiations, and that war ended, but in subsequent years leading up to this conflict, the cycle of war continued. But that’s something that sticks out in my mind in that 2014 conflict.

AMY GOODMAN: I wanted to ask about Jordan’s position in all of this, Trita Parsi, what role it plays. You had the United States, Britain, Jordan, France all intercepting some of these drones and missiles.

TRITA PARSI: Yes, numerous countries participated in the interception of these missiles. And the only reason they could do so was because the Iranians had given them 72 hours’ heads-up, deliberately, because the entire purpose of this exercise was not to inflict damage but to restore what the Iranians believe is their deterrence and showcase their capability. And as Gideon said, the shooting down of these missiles was quite impressive, but I think we also have to keep in mind that there might be a different scenario in the future in which there is no forewarning of these attacks, and as a result, France, Britain and the United States will not be able to prepare for and participate, in this extent, in the shooting down of the missiles. And then, as a result, it’s not entirely clear to what extent the Israeli air defenses would be capable of handling what would likely be a much larger barrage of missiles shot at Israel. So, I think the Israelis may have also picked up that at the end of the day, a military confrontation, even though Israel, of course, is much stronger than Iran, and certainly the U.S. is, but, nevertheless, will be very, very damaging to Israel, as well. And that, I think, is one of the key messages the Iranians were trying to send.

The Jordanians are, of course, caught in the middle there, because all of these different things are then flying over Jordanian airspace. And the Jordanian position has been that they’re defending their airspace. They are not defending Israel. This is not done in order to necessarily help the Israelis. It’s to make sure that Jordan asserts that no war should be taking place on its territory or in its airspace. That, nevertheless, is a tough position for the Jordanians to take, given the very, very strong sentiments that are now boiling over inside of Jordan because of the population’s frustration with what is happening in Gaza and their perception that the Jordanian government, and the Arab world at large, have been helpless and not done enough to prevent the slaughter.

AMY GOODMAN: I wanted to ask Gideon Levy if you’ve been surprised by the amount of conversation going on between Iran and the United States, perhaps not directly. And also I want to put that question to Reza Sayah. But where the result is, you have United States saying they will not participate in Israel’s retaliation, if they retaliate against Iran?

GIDEON LEVY: First of all, I would say we always portray Iran as a crazy state, as an insane state. It might be described like this. But in this case, it was very measured. Very measured. I wish the United States and Iran would have spoken much more. I wish the agreement, the nuclear agreement, would be still valid, and we would be in a much better place and safer place, rather than what both Donald Trump and Netanyhahu arranged us, canceling this agreement, which was the best way to prevent Iran from getting nuclear weapons. The more they speak, the better — under the table, above the table, behind the curtains, any way to talk to them. I still believe that every regime has its own interests, and dialogue is, by the end of the day, the best way, even if it’s the Satan of Iran.

AMY GOODMAN: And can you talk, as you talked about what’s happening also on the West Bank, if you can talk about the most recent news about the death of one of the most prominent Palestinian prisoners in an Israeli prison, died of cancer, novelist Walid Daqqa, who spent the past 38 years locked up for his involvement in an armed group that abducted and killed an Israeli soldier in 1984, rights groups pressuring Israel to release him, saying he was in dire need of medical attention, Amnesty International calling for his release, saying that since October 7th he had been tortured, humiliated and denied family visits? You’ve written about this.

GIDEON LEVY: I’m following this story for many, many years. I even visited Walid once in jail many years ago. It’s one of those horrible stories which tells you much more than the story itself. Walid Daqqa is an Israeli. He is not a Palestinian from the West Bank. He’s an Israeli Palestinian. He, by the way, didn’t murder. He participated in a group which kidnapped an Israeli soldier and then killed him, some of them. He was not involved in it. But he was charged for murder and everything fined. He sat 37 years for this murder, much more than any murderer in the world — in Israel, not in the world. He, in this period, changed his — declared that he had enough with terror, declared that he regrets any terror actions. He’s exactly the style of leadership that we should look forwards, those Palestinians who change their minds and clear terror as a tool.

But, no, for Israel, no Palestinian is good enough, and here, in the last years, started really a sadistic behavior toward him and his family. No visits. When he started to be ill in cancer, when he got no visits half the year now, they didn’t even inform the family that he’s dying. They didn’t even inform the family he died. And now it’s already 10 days. They don’t even return the body, and don’t let them mourn in their home. I mean, what is more sadistic than this? And what is more the face of this current government of Israel? When it comes to Palestinians, Israeli Palestinians or Palestinians from the West Bank or Gaza, sadism is the name of the game.

AMY GOODMAN: And I wanted to give Reza Sayah the last word. In U.S. media, we don’t often hear from people in Tehran. You’re a freelance journalist there in the capital of Iran. You’ve been covering Iran’s relationship with Hamas, particularly in the aftermath of October 7th. Could you expand on this, and what you think it’s most important for people to understand outside of Iran, and particularly here in the United States?

REZA SAYAH: Well, I think, from the people’s standpoint, the people here are resilient. Most of them are peace-loving people who do not want war.

And I want to follow up on Mr. Levy’s thought about how Iran is often portrayed in Western media to the American and Western audience as a radical, reckless, violent government. And I think a lot of thoughtful analysts will tell you that a radical entity, a radical government, would not last for 45 years like the Islamic Republic has. And these analysts will tell you that the reason that they have survived for these 45-plus years is that they’re not reckless, that they’re very calculating and they’re measured.

And they understand, at this very high-stakes juncture, that there are forces that perhaps Israel wants to bait them into a wider war. And I think Iran understands that that would be a mistake. I think many here understand that if they get baited into a wider war, it would be a distraction to what’s happening in Gaza, that has served the establishment here well by getting them a lot of political clout. And it would also potentially galvanize and unite Israel with its Western allies, Western allies that have been critical of Israel in their operation in Gaza.

So, at this hour, they’re waiting to see what Israel does, if Israel retaliates. But history has shown that if Israel retaliates, Iran is going to be aware of what their responses could cost, and they’re going to take a measured response. It’s obviously a very high-stakes chess game, and a lot of people anxious to see what happens in the coming days.

TRUMP/GREENWOOD BIBLE — A REVIEW

Posted in Uncategorized by @honestcharlie on April 8, 2024

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The time has come to face the situation and admit defeat. Changing our name to THE INSANE TIMES seemed the most accurate response to recent developments, but that would make online searches for past editions difficult and confusing and it would be admitting something about personalities and forces at large here in the 21st Century. The truth is that these days discourse and events that generate such discourse are worthy of perhaps indifference. Indeed, why give these foul maggots any more attention than what they already get from our media in lieu of advertising expenditures?

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Now to the situations and the first person seems warranted. I have no idea how and who is interpreting what is going on and suspect most have just shut themselves off. I think the very strange man with the orange hair, on the other hand, fortells the Apocalypse. The Zionist entity, a cancerous blister on the face of a sickly world is spreading and increasing it its foul puss, killing those who have no weapons and saying it was “unintentional”.

So we need to refer to what is called in AA meetings a “Higher Power,” in this case, the Donald Trump/Lee Greenwood version of the KING JAMES BIBLE. If anyone out there can help clarify or answer any of the issues raised, surely what is left of civilization will be thrilled and perhaps relieved for the help. No research was done for this version – only that accumulated over the years and from various sources, but specific verses and authorities, much less page numbers, do not come up much on conversation and hence fade from the memory.

You can obtain much valuable background from a film called INHERIT THE WIND, a rendering of the main issues from an actual trial over the legality of Darwin in Ackron, Tennesee (not “Heavenly Hillsboro, as in the film”). All the characters were real, the dialogue is close to that in the trial transcripts, and it discusses the very King James version of the Bible, yes, the real version upon which so much of our attitudes and beliefs are based and which is available for only $59.99 from Donald Trump (CAUTION, PAGES MAY STICK TOGETHER). The book itself may spur on a new mantra, MAPA (as Donald has it, MAKE AMERICA PRAY AGAIN). Hey, I shit you not. The movie has been done three times, with Spencer Tracy, Jason Robards, and Jack Lemmon as the great Clarence Darrow. If there is interest, I’ll review those productions in another edition.

Now for the world as this “Good Book” portrays it. The Donald presents us with the entire book, although for about a century the parts of it that Thomas Jefferson considered “nonsense” were ripped out of his edition, but all Senators and Congressmen, and OFFICERS were sworn in on it. Does God (see illustration above) accept that?

Well, we do need to have a bit of background as to how this book germinated. Earlier versions, in a form of Hebrew, were written down or scribbled, and the fashion then was to just use the consonants and forget about the vowels, an expedient that is about 89% reliable. Of course, that leaves at least some of it unreliable.

My first interest in this whole thing excluded Wycliff and any other translation. It is strictly King James (er, he followed Elizabeth I, the age of Shakespeare, Spenser, Marlowe, Ben Jonson, and a slew of others). So, how did this whole miserable existence start? I’d followed Hoyle (steady state universe), expanding, also followed by contracting, black holes, and so on, but never found a first cause. This could very well be a result of custom overcoming logic as we are conditioned to think in terms of cause and effect. Suppose effect comes first?

So, as best I can remember, it all started with “let there be light!” Well, that certainly beats working in the dark, but where is the light emanating from? From behind the Firmanent.

See, there was this firmament, and God “Parteth” it. Now where was this firmament and what was it doing? So, I guess we are in the second day, but you realize that the sun doesn’t come into this until the fourth day (as the movie points out) so how long was the first day and how are we measuring it? I don’t think we are going to get very far with this idea, so let us jump ahead.

Here is only the first of several pronouncements, perhaps laws, that is repeated several times through these pages. It states that “If a woman grabbeth a man by his secrets, her hand shall be cut off”.) I actually do not remember the exact penalty for grabbing your man by his secrets, but it was severe. Several times when a social event morphed into a conversion conspiracy, I asked these humans what the secrets were, but got no answer. At most, the female members of the force simply bowed their heads to the floor, hoping that no divine wrath would befall them. i HASTEN TO ADD THAT THERE IS NO SUCH RULE ABOUT PUSSYS.

Careful, kids, the same is applied to you, so it’s best you leave daddy’s secrets alone. I’m not sure what they are, but it certainly seems like an insalubrious gesture to me, so best to ask your local priest – and bring the TRUMP/LEE GREENWOOD Bible with you.

The next one was first mentioned by Mark Twain. It seems there was this guy named Jereboam and God warned him to behave or he would separated “from those who pisseth against the wall”. I imagine this was a very severe punishment, but there are other ways and places to relieve the pleasure. If you are confused about what this means, even Luther figured it out and it is in his translation.

The first time I heard David Steinberg’s sermon on Job was in Chicago where I worked a bit at the Second City. He was mimicking a Rabbi he knew in New York. I was not a very good candidate for full-time activity because, although I could make up good lines when confronted, and start far-out situations, I never could remember my lines when it came to act or present them. That is something to remember when you hear someone claim they do things extemporaneously: actually, they have just about every situation done and rehearsed before it is even shouted out from the audience. The sermon ws the reason the Smothers Brothers was cancelled by CBS.

So Job is interesting because Jaweh sounds so stupid, arbitrary, and gullible that he does all sorts of ridiculous and sadistic things to Job just to show Satan how much people liked him. The whole thing about this religion caused Voltaire to attack Christianity because it was just a disguise for the same thing and later, in the Middle of the Twentieth Century, Jung mentioned that the whole Jesus birth and re-birth idea was God’s way of straightening out his act.

Just one final topical item: somewhere in the Old Testament it is mentioned that God wants certain abortions to take place, mainly involving slaves who got pregnant.

The last issue, Revelations, is beyond me. It is some sort of allegory. In an allegory, one or more characters are posited as representing some value. Edmund started off with an epic on Holiness, and his adventures feature the forces against him. He is the Red ‘Cross Knight. The next is moderation or Sir Guyon (Gee youn). An antagonist on holiness is Duessa, or duplicity, and so on. This goes on for a long time and Spenser dies before he finishes a bit more than six epics. I’ve written extensively on this.

REVELATIONS is completely beyond me. A plethora of horned demons, horses will, fire breathers, and so on infest the book. I simply assume it is the product of too much peyote and acid and whatever uppers were available. Frankly, I simply leave the entire project to fans of canon law.

So, I’ve seen enough proof the Trump/Greenwood book. I have heard reports that some of the pages stick together. I hereby relinquish any further interest in book reviewing.

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THE ABSURD TIMES

  1. I have no idea who she is or where these digits come from. Still, what the hell?
  1. This is Dean’s report on the farcical apex of Trump’S griftmanship, BIBLES FOR SALE!!! But these are not just bibles – they are the Trump edition of the Lee Greenwood bible, originally published under royalty (King James I – often called the ‘wisest fool in Christendom”). It is notable here because it is firmly in the public domain and hence no publishers or authors need to be paid. It also includes the Constitution, the Declaration of Independence, the Lyrics to Lee Greenwood’s song, and the Bill of Rights (word for word as it appears in the Constitution, op cit.).

I’m publishing it now as the effect on my cognitive structures has diminished and also so I can keep working on the introduction to it which I will publish shortly.

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BIBLE

Trump selling Bibles proves again: There’s a MAGA sucker born every minute!

Trump wants MAGA to PAY Again!

DEAN OBEIDALLAH

MAR 27, 2024

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Famed infomercial hosts Billy Mays and Ron Popeil have nothing on Donald Trump. Even they didn’t hawk three new products in a month. Add to that, none of them– like Trump is now—were out on bail while selling their wares!

We all recall last month when Trump rolled out his new sneaker line featuring the golden colored, “Never Surrender High-top sneaker” that bore a large “T” and the number “45.” Those kicks set you back $399.00. Trump also unveiled at the same time his new “Victory 47” cologne that came “encased in a luxurious gold bottle” at $99 a pop. That cologne apparently is for the man who wants to smell like a cross between cheeseburgers and victimhood.

Now Trump has a new product for his adoring fans: A Trump endorsed Bible. That’s right, from the man who has broken every Commandment—likely more than once even though he can’t name them—comes the Trump endorsed “God Bless the USA Bible" just in time for Easter. How much will this Bible—which per the website is “the only Bible endorsed” by Trump—cost you? Only $59.99.

But for $59.99 you don’t just get a Bible. You also get the lyrics to country singer Lee Greenwood’s song, “God Bless the USA.” But wait…there’s more! Trump will also send you a copy of the Bill of Rights, Declaration of Independence, Pledge of Allegiance and the U.S. Constitution. (I’m betting Trump has read the US Constitution less than the Bible.)

Trump—like Ron Popeil—pitched this new Bible by way of an infomercial-esque video complete with outrageous claims. Some of the best moments include Trump holding up the Bible while speaking directly to the camera, boasting that the Bible comes with a copy of the US Constitution “which I’m fighting for every day…very hard.” This coming from a guy facing numerous federal and state felonies for attempting to end our Constitution by overturning the 2020 election.

Then Trump—like Tony Hawk selling his famed work out equipment the AbRider and the Gazelle—made the case that since he uses the product with great results, you should too. That is where the man facing a criminal trial in New York next month for paying hush money to a porn star after having an affair with her just six months after his wife Melania gave birth to their only child, told us: “All Americans need a Bible in their home and I have many, it’s my favorite book.” Perhaps Trump keeps the hush money in the Bibles?!

From there, Trump moved on to the hard sell, telling his fans, “Religion and Christianity are the biggest things missing from this country and I truly believe that we need to bring them back here and we have to bring them back fast.” Adding, “I’m proud to endorse and encourage you to get this Bible. We must make America pray again.” In reality, Trump is simply trying to get his supporters to PAY again.

Trump wrapped up this unholy infomercial telling supporters: “I think you all should get a copy of God Bless the U.S.A. Bible now and help spread our Christian values with others. There you have it.”

Of course, this is the same Trump who during the 2016 campaign told students at a Christian college that "Two Corinthians 3:17, that’s the whole ballgame. … Is that the one you like?" The students laughed because the correct reference is not Two Corinthians, but "Second Corinthians."

And during the 2016 campaign when asked for his favorite Bible verse that has inspired him, Trump told the host, "I mean, when we get into the Bible, I think many, so many. And some people, look, an ‘eye for an eye,’ you can almost say that.” Wait until Trump hears about Jesus saying “turn the other cheek” in the New Testament?!

Will Trump’s supporters buy this Bible/US Constitution/Declaration of Independence/Lee Greenwood lyrics package?! Of course they will. Just like some bought his sneakers, cologne and millions more have bought Trump’s non-stop lies.

That’s where the jokes end. The problem facing our nation is not Trump, it’s his followers. While we are disgusted by all things Trump from his attempted coup to his selling Bibles, they love him for it.

This type of blind loyalty to Trump is one of the defining traits of fascist movements. Yale Professor Jason Stanley, author of the book “How Fascism Works,” explained in July 2020: “Fascism is based on power, loyalty, and fear of the other. The fascist leader is infallible.” He added, “And anyone who opposes him is immediately a traitor to the nation.”

Stanley then noted about Trump: “The connection he has forged with his supporters ever since he first ran, remember the comment, ‘I could shoot someone on Fifth Avenue in broad daylight and I wouldn’t lose a single supporter?’, adding, “That’s a fascist connection of total loyalty.”

The question is why is that millions of Americans can be taken by a conman who is faced with numerous felonies and has left behind a string of failed businesses from Trump University to Trump airlines to Trump Vodka and more?!

A big part—although not the only explanation—is that nearly 60% of those who voted for Trump in 2020 are white people with a high school education or less. Even in the 2024 GOP primary, Nikki Haley won more college educated Republicans in states like South Carolina while two-thirds of Trump’s backers were white people without a college degree.

To be clear: You 100% do not need to go to college or beyond to be intelligent. I know many lawyers I worked with who are idiots and, conversely, I know people with high school degrees who are remarkable. But as studies have noted–there is a connection between higher education levels and critical thinking skills.

There’s also the fact that people with only high school degrees versus college degrees typically have a higher unemployment rate and lower incomes. For example, a recent study found in 2023 that the median income for recent graduates reached $60,000 a year for bachelor’s degree holders aged 22–27. For high school graduates the same age, median earnings were much lower at about $36,000 a year.

The fact that life hasn’t worked out for some of these Trump supporters explains why they are attracted to a person who tells them don’t blame yourself for any failings, blame others. This explains the reason Trump’s victimhood narrative is so alluring for his base.

Of course, there are Trump supporters who are very educated and very successful. I doubt they will buy Trump sneakers or his cologne. But they will still vote for him because he serves other interests, from maintaining white supremacy to tax cuts for the wealthy.

At this point, though, our laser focus must be on winning in 2024, not psycho-analyzing Trumpers. But with each Trump lie and new product he sells, he reminds us: There’s a MAGA sucker born every minute!

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26 March, 2024 15:52

Posted in Uncategorized by @honestcharlie on March 26, 2024

Israel: who needs it?

ISRAEL: WHAT’S THE POINT?

CRAP

ABSURDTIMES

MAR 25, 2024

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THE ABSURD TIMES

Food insecurity? “I don’t see any food insecurity in Gaza” — Bibi

NOTE: AFTER THIS WAS WRITTEN, THE UNITED STATES APPROVED A RESOLUTION IN THE SECURITY COUNCIL, NIT WIT YAHOO CANCELLED A VISIT OF HIS OFFICERS TO THE U.S., AND SUDDENLY BIDEN IS ANTI-SEMETIC. AGAIN: SO WHAT?

ISRAEL: WHAT’S THE POINT?

BY

ABSURD TIMES

This is a propitious time to ask what possible reason or excuse anyone can posit for even the point of having an Israel – at least an Israel that serves only the interest of a few foul-minded cowards and swinish pot-belled slime-dwellers.

A new report by the research group Forensic Architecture counters Israel’s argument at the International Court of Justice that it followed humanitarian policies to safeguard civilian life in Gaza. South Africa argued in January before the ICJ that Israel was guilty of genocide during its war on Gaza. The report argues that what Israel says are humanitarian evacuations in Gaza actually amount to the forced displacement of Palestinians, which is a war crime. It found that since October 7, Israel has issued imprecise and sometimes contradictory evacuation orders, attacked people even in so-called safe zones and evacuation routes, and failed to provide the necessities of life for those civilians, all while pushing the population further and further south into areas that are then also attacked or evacuated at a later time. “We cannot see it as anything else but part of the genocidal campaign,” says Forensic Architecture director Eyal Weizman, who accuses Israel of using humanitarian principles as yet another weapon against Palestinians in Gaza. He says Israel’s objective is to “exercise pain on the civilian population” in order to deter “ongoing resistance to the Israeli occupation.”

So there is no point to support Israel. It is a homeland for Jewish Supremacy. ISRAEL UBER ALLES! The language used by these swinish leaders of that state makes clear their attitude towards the rest of the WORLD

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. No faction is more aware of this mark on their own integrity than Jews in what is now their diaspora: the ones who know and respect the tenants of their own religion. Yet sane people can occupy government buildings, demonstrate all they want, but they will never be a match for the lucre of the Jewish Supremists. Only when this sort of treachery interfers with wealth will this viscious thing called Israel be crushed.

Transcript

This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.

AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, The War and Peace Report. I’m Amy Goodman, with Nermeen Shaikh.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: We look now at a new report published by the research group Forensic Architecture, which counters Israel’s argument at the International Court of Justice that it followed humanitarian policies to safeguard civilian life in Gaza. South Africa argued in January before the ICJ that Israel was guilty of genocide during its war on Gaza. The report argues that what Israel says are humanitarian evacuations in Gaza actually amount to the forced displacement of Palestinians, which is a war crime.

AMY GOODMAN: For more, we’re joined in London by Eyal Weizman, a British Israeli architect born in Haifa. He’s founder and director of Forensic Architecture, a professor of spatial and visual cultures at Goldsmiths College at the University of London. He’s the author of several books, including Hollow Land: Israel’s Architecture of Occupation and The Least of All Possible Evils: A Short History of Humanitarian Violence. He’s also a member of the Technology Advisory Board of the International Criminal Court and of the Center for Investigative Journalism.

Eyal, welcome to Democracy Now! As we come to air right now, the United States has presented a resolution to the U.N. Security Council for a temporary ceasefire. I’m wondering if you could respond to that and Netanyahu only speaking with Republicans, behind closed doors — now he might be addressing a joint session of Congress, if the House speaker decides to invite him — saying that Rafah invasion will happen.

EYAL WEIZMAN: Yeah. If a Rafah invasion will happen, we will see the humanitarian disaster, the man-made humanitarian disaster imposed on Gaza, just aggravated to levels that we haven’t yet experienced. In Rafah, we have a huge part of the Palestinian people evacuated to living in inhumane conditions where there are famine and lack of basic humanitarian provisions, in something that is called a “safe zone.” And I think that it’s important to understand that there is no safe place in Gaza. Although Israel is designating part of the Strip as so-called safe areas and ordering the population to evacuate to them, it continuously imposes on these areas conditions that amount to unlivable conditions and in continuation of its genocidal policies.

So, what we need to — my comment to that is, rather than allowing any or entertaining any specific plans and provisions, you know, that the U.S. is discussing now with the Israelis about allowing them to attack Rafah under certain conditions, we need to see immediate ceasefire across the board in all places of Gaza, in order to allow for the rebuilding of the Strip, in order to allow for humanitarian provision to reach each and every Palestinian in the north and in the south.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: Well, Eyal Weizman, the proposal that the U.S. has put forth — this is before we turn to your report. The proposal that the U.S. has put forth for a temporary ceasefire is reportedly for the release of Israeli hostages and allowing more humanitarian aid into Gaza. You wrote in a piece — I want to ask you about a piece you wrote for the London Review of Books in November in which you document — the piece is headlined “Exchange Rate,” where you document the change in Israel policy with respect to its hostages. So, if you could talk about the way that that’s played out? You wrote the piece in November. If you could talk about the way that’s played out, and how you think that might affect what happens now, going forward, with respect to the hundred or so hostages who remain, who are reportedly still alive?

EYAL WEIZMAN: I think that what you see in all negotiations around the captives and the Palestinian prisoners sitting in Israeli prisons, some of them on administrative detentions without charge, thousands of them, is that Israel has been creating and enlarging its bank of prisoners in order to create — in order to allow it to change the exchange rate. The title of that piece in the LRB was “Exchange Rate,” and it was looking at the history of Palestinian resistance to Israeli occupation through the capture of captives, from — really, from the famous airplane hijacks of the ’70s all the way to the present, the way in which Palestinians forced Israel into — the only way that Palestinians could actually affect and release their prisoners is through capturing Israeli captives. Over the years, the exchange rate has changed favorably to the Palestinians. And what you’re seeing is that Israel is now arresting people in order — Palestinians, again, and holding them in administrative detention, in order to beef up its bank of captives.

More than that, you could see that in the reports on the negotiation, the fate of those people that have been purportedly evacuated into safe areas is being brought into the equation. One way of thinking about it is to say, of course, Hamas or Palestinian factions in Gaza are holding over 100 Israeli captives, and Israel is holding close to 2 million Palestinian captives and bargaining for their return home in exchange for its prisoners. And that is obviously patently illegal, according to international law. And the fact that even that is being brought into the negotiation testifies that that was the intent of holding them away from their home as a bargaining chip towards that. So, you have an exchange rate now that is 200 million Palestinians displaced — sorry, 2 million Palestinians displaced, 100 Israeli captives, and this is really where the negotiations are going.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: Eyal Weizman, let’s turn to your report, the Forensic Architecture report, which is headlined “Humanitarian Violence in Gaza.” If you could begin just by explaining — the two words don’t normally come together, “humanitarian” and “violence.”

EYAL WEIZMAN: Right.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: If you could explain what you mean by that? Of course, you’ve also written a book on this. And then lay out the three phases of mass displacement that you document in the report.

EYAL WEIZMAN: Yeah. So, you know, we think about humanitarian principles — and part of them is international humanitarian law, so-called the laws of war — as being there to protect civilians. But a certain manipulation of international humanitarian law allows you to have operational advantage, or, in this case, advantage in negotiation over the captives in this particular way. So, there is a principle, an accepted principle, in international — in humanitarianism that if you want to evacuate a population into a safe zone, that safe zone needs to have several conditions. There needs to be proper medical care. There needs to be proper food and housing in these areas. Israel has evacuated — ordered the evacuation of Palestinians from within Gaza and from the north to the south into areas that were repeatedly under attack, into areas with no housing, no medical care, and now that we see no food is being provided in it, or very little, or not sufficient levels of aid within that. So, that is, firstly, you know, the kind of the principle of using a humanitarian principle that is purportedly used in order to save, in order to treat civilians and take them out of harm’s way, in order to achieve Israel’s operational objectives in this attack on Gaza, and that is to exercise pain on the civilian population to generate levels of destruction and harm that would deter Palestinians from ongoing resistance to the Israeli occupation.

And it’s becoming more and more clear that the harm, that the levels of destruction that we’re seeing, that the level of displacement that we’re seeing, are not the byproduct and not the collateral effects of this conflict, but really the only thing that Israel has achieved during that war. It hasn’t achieved any of its tactical aims. It hasn’t dismantled Hamas as an operative force. It hasn’t captured the Hamas leadership. It hasn’t freed hostages, except of in very rare situations. What it has done is create an equation in which the civilian population is being put in harm’s way in order to bargain against their return back to the north, to north of Gaza, in order to effectively achieve what tactically Israel has not achieved.

So, in relation to the stages, a week or so after the October 7th attack, Israel has given the entirety of the north of Gaza an evacuation order. They were ordered to leave the north of Gaza, home to over a million Palestinians, the center of Palestinian political, cultural life, was actually ordered to cross Wadi Gaza, which divides, according to them, Gaza into north and south. That was the first stage. And after the ceasefire, the temporary ceasefire in which some prisoner exchange was happening at the beginning of December, what Israel has done is releasing an interactive map online, dividing Gaza into kind of a gerrymandered 623 zones. It was very difficult, with people that we spoke to in Gaza, to understand whether they are in zone number 546 or 547. The map was extremely confusing. It was released online at a time of very frequent internet and power cuts, or it was communicated via leaflets that were unevenly distributed. It was an incredibly confusing system that led to the ongoing displacement of Palestinians from one zone to the other. So, when they were — after they were ordered to all move into southern Gaza, from different parts in the southern part of Gaza, they were ordered to go into different places.

And what the report is showing is the systematic and ongoing use of these evacuation orders were meant to achieve that population displacement and that people were continuously being put in harm’s way. The routes, the so-called safe routes, along which Palestinians were ordered to evacuate were attacked. Areas where they went to had no provisions and very often were attacked themselves. So, we cannot see that humanitarian policy, so-called humanitarian policy, of the Israeli forces — and the argument that the Israelis put forward in The Hague that, you know, they are not in violation of the Genocide Convention because they apply humanitarian principle, but we cannot see it as anything else but part of the genocidal campaign that is actually inflicted on Palestinians in Gaza.

AMY GOODMAN: And now, of course, if Netanyahu does succeed in a full-scale ground invasion of Rafah, they will go back to all these places they were forced to flee. And they talk about, “No worries, Palestinian civilians will be protected in these humanitarian zones.” Eyal Weizman, if you could respond to that? And also, just for people to understand, your organization is so unusual, and it also operates in several different countries, you yourself born in Haifa. If you could explain how you do what you do? We are also showing a series of maps, where you show the stages, one, two, three. You’ve done so many different investigations, from who killed Shireen Abu Akleh, the great Al Jazeera Arabic reporter — when Israel was saying caught in crossfire, you proved the opposite: She was killed by an Israeli sniper — among other things. Can you talk about what Forensic Architecture does, and what you, as an Israeli British architect, are doing in this kind of analysis — an architect?

EYAL WEIZMAN: Yeah, thank you for asking that. Of course, the nature of the Israeli occupation in Gaza and the West Bank, and throughout Palestine complete, makes use of architecture as part of the violence applied on Palestinians. So, starting from the location of settlements on hilltops in a way that divide the Occupied Territories, surveys it, bisect Palestinian-built fabric, the design of roads, the provisional infrastructure, you could say that settler colonialism is architecturally enacted.

In Gaza, obviously, we had settlements in Gaza up until 2005, when they were evacuated, but after that, the Gaza envelope is a system of civilian and military infrastructure that included a number of fences and earth berms and military facilities, as well as kibbutzim and moshavim. These are agrarian settlements that are part of what Israel always called its regional defense.

Of course, all that system was attacked on October 7th. So you could see how architecture is mobilized as part of the system of control and occupation of Palestinians. You could see why Palestinians would attack that system of infrastructure — and this is without commending and, of course, not supporting the killing and abduction of civilians.

But I think that architecture is a key part of that, of understanding the conflict, the long history of Israel’s settler colonization, and also understanding what is happening in Gaza now. It is happening in urban environment. And one has to understand what this urban environment, that has been created over the years of — you know, since, really, the Gaza Strip was created as a historical anomaly in 1948, when it was carved out as a kind of concentration area for refugees, becoming one of the densest parts of the world, most densely inhabited part of the world. How do you control population centers? And a lot of thinking was done from the Israeli side in terms of thinking about the control of Palestinians as an urban problem.

And what we see now happening in Gaza is the shaping of Gaza for, you know, the day after. Would it come now? Would it come in weeks, in months? We do not know. But what we see is Israel actually shaping the built fabric, destroying all homes and agricultural areas in a huge buffer zone along the border, creating east-west routes, not only the famous one that we know, around Deir al-Balah, but all throughout that very long and thin strip of territory, the Gaza Strip, we see it being truncated, almost cut like salami, with routes and military infrastructure that would be there in order to isolate and divide different parts of the Gaza Strip, if resistance continues, from the Palestinian parts.

And so, architecture — if architecture is really the means by which Israel exercises control, we, architects, and the organization that I run, Forensic Architecture, is — you know, has many architects working with us, but also open-source investigators, journalists, lawyers, etc. — we are monitoring things from a cartographic, spatial and architectural perspective. We work very closely, and we have a partner organization in Ramallah, the Al-Haq Forensic Architecture Unit, because we understand that working in Palestine, like working anywhere else in the world — Forensic Architecture has also got offices in Mexico, in Bogotá; now we’re starting one in Istanbul, in Athens, in many other places in the world. But understanding the lived reality, understanding the way that architecture is used as an oppressive mechanism requires also the lived experience — understanding the lived experience of people there. And therefore, when we’ve done that report that you mentioned, we’ve been in touch with — we’ve been in touch with Palestinians on the ground, we’ve been in touch with medical professionals, with doctors, in understanding the conditions in the so-called safe zones. And as I say, there are no safe areas in Gaza.

We’ve tried to understand the spatial logic of that campaign. And we could see that one of the main strategic tools for Israel to control and afflict that pain on Gaza is through the evacuation orders, and that they have been spatially designed — initially, again, dividing north Gaza from south Gaza, and then dividing it into 600 Tetris parts, if you like, in which, you know, you would get very a confusing order in which your number would come up, and you would be told to go from that number zone into another number zone. Do you get this message? Do you understand it? And also, on the way, you’d be attacked. And the zone in which you’re being evacuated to is itself unsafe and unlivable.

So, here what we see is the abuse of humanitarian principles to further Israeli genocidal campaign. And this is why we call that report “Humanitarian Violence.” We need to be very, very wary when we are speaking about humanitarian principles in war, because very often militaries — not only the Israeli militaries, but, you know, Western, Northern, global — militaries from the Global North, when they engage in urban warfare in parts of the Global South, they are applying humanitarian principles — they’re playing international law in a particular way that does not contain violence, that actually amplifies it.

I’ll give you another example for that: warnings. You know, you could think that to warn a population is actually something that could be very, very helpful. It could save lives. But, actually, the aims of these warnings, or what is implied in them — and sometimes explicitly mentioned — is that if you do not heed the warning, you would be considered potentially part of the armed resistance in a particular area. That means you get redesignated from a protected civilian to a nonprotected either voluntary human shield or part of a resistance, if you do not heed the warning. So, in a sense, with one legal tool, you created the redesignation of a big part of the population, and you basically let the blood in that way. So, humanitarianism, when it — those principles, when they’re using in such a brutal campaign, it could be actually part of the problem, rather than something that is moderating and defending civilians.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: Eyal Weizman, if we could talk a little bit more about that? The scale, just to point out, just to give us a sense of the scale of the crisis of mass expulsions, at the moment, almost 70% of the total area of the Gaza Strip has been issued evacuation orders. If you could say, very quickly, in terms of the International Court of Justice ruling, what does your report suggest about the defense that Israel presented?

EYAL WEIZMAN: Yeah, that the defense is completely inapplicable. We will show how — and we have shown how — Israeli military, the occupation forces, when they maneuver through — if you look at things in relation to each other, if you look at military maneuver, you look at areas that have been bombed, as we have, through speaking to people, through analyzing videos, through looking at satellite imagery, we have a good understanding, we have a good map of what are the areas that have been bombed. Overlay that with the so-called safe zones, overlay them with Israeli military maneuver, and what you see is, A, civilians are being evacuated into areas that have been bombed, that have no facilities, and are continuously bombing — they are still being bombed as Israel has ordered civilians into them. And you see, in some cases, Israeli military maneuver, Israeli invasion into the area it itself designated as safe zones.

So, in a sense, you see those categories operating in relation to each other as part of an overall strategy, rather than you’re seeing humanitarian principle pushing against military violence and moderating it. You see it has become one of the tools in the Israeli campaign toolbox to generate that level of destruction in Gaza. So, you know, you’re speaking about 70% of the area is being displaced. And the proportion —

AMY GOODMAN: Eyal, we have 10 seconds.

EYAL WEIZMAN: The proportion of people displaced is much higher, and the proportion of civilian infrastructure destroyed is almost complete. So, look at those things together and understand the militarization of humanitarian principles.

AMY GOODMAN: Eyal Weizman, we clearly have so much to talk about. We’d like to ask you to stay, and we’ll post Part 2 online at democracynow.org. Eyal Weizman is a British Israeli architect, founder and director of Forensic Architecture. We’ll link to the new report, “Humanitarian Violence: Israel’s Abuse of Preventive Measures in Its 2023-2024 Genocidal Military Campaign in the Occupied Gaza Strip.”

The original content of this program is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. Please attribute legal copies of this work to democracynow.org. Some of the work(s) that this program incorporates, however, may be separately licensed. For further information or additional permissions, contact us.

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ABSURD TIMES

Posted in Uncategorized by @honestcharlie on March 18, 2024

HERE’S MEHDI!

ABSURDTIMES

MAR 18, 2024

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THE ABSURD TIMES

From Latuff: how is it possble to focus on the atrocities?

HERE IS MORE!

See signature. Catches the mood.

This approaches the mood. Finally, our media exposed.

We have been waiting for something like this. Either the capitalist AI engineered the destruction, no, the pollution, of so generously called mainstream media which managed to destroy any perception of reality in recent months, or perhaps years. We refrained from comment at the time, at least direct comment, in the hopes that a reliable source would approach the subject and thus spare our readers of being confronted with a string of expletives and angry finger shaking.

As we said at the time, the week after October 8, any on air speaker who had any reliable knowledge of the history of activities concerning Israel was summarily taken off the air and replaced by the nearest qualified talker with nice teeth. Nothing negative was allowed on the stations, although if the journalist did report a harmless fact, it was allowed to be broadcast or telecast.

We waited until now to present as clear and objective presentation. While Ayman Mohedien and Ali Velshi are now back on the air, it is easy to suspect that Israel’s magnificently outrageous and sadistic behavior, reminiscent of old WWII films (yes, Donald, there was a WWII) has so infuriated even apathetic Americans to the point they voted “uncommitted” on several primary ballots, even though Biden is virtually unopposed, because of his doddering support of Nit Wit Yahoo (who will stay out of prison so long as he can keep up the killing). Israel has now murdered over 31,000 since October 8, and continues to defy even banality in the area. About a third of the dead are children who we assure you are not members of Hamas.

This is a comprehensive piece, so if the letter transmission cuts it off, the rest is available by clicking the link. Also, If enough have aproblem getting there, please let me know and I will post the rest.

Acclaimed journalist Mehdi Hasan joins us to discuss U.S. media coverage of the Israeli war on Gaza and how the war is a genocide being abetted by the United States. Hasan says U.S. media is overwhelmingly pro-Israel and fails to convey the truth to audiences. “Palestinian voices not being on American television or in American print is one of the biggest problems when it comes to our coverage of this conflict,” he says. Hasan has just launched a new media company, Zeteo, which he started after the end of his weekly news program on MSNBC and Peacock earlier this year. Hasan’s interviews routinely led to viral segments, including his tough questioning of Israeli government spokesperson Mark Regev, but the cable network announced it was canceling his show in November. The move drew considerable outrage, with critics slamming MSNBC for effectively silencing one of the most prominent Muslim voices in U.S. media. Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu continues to threaten a ground invasion of Rafah in southern Gaza, which human rights groups warn would be a massacre. President Biden has said such an escalation is a “red line” for him, but Netanyahu has vowed to push ahead anyway. “Where is the outcry here in the West?” asks Hasan of reports of Israeli war crimes, including the killing of over 100 journalists in the past five months in Gaza and the blockade of aid from the region. “It’s a stain on [Biden’s] record, on America’s conscience.”

Transcript

This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: The death toll in Gaza has topped 31,300. At least five people were killed on Wednesday when Israel bombed an UNRWA aid distribution center in Rafah — one of the U.N. agency’s last remaining aid sites in Gaza. The head of UNRWA called the attack a, quote, “blatant disregard to international humanitarian law.”

This comes as much of Gaza is on the brink of famine as Israel continues to limit the amount of aid allowed into the besieged territory. At least 27 Palestinians have died of starvation, including 23 children.

Meanwhile, Al Jazeera is reporting six Palestinians were killed in Gaza City when Israeli forces opened fire again on crowds waiting for food aid. Over 80 people were injured.

In other news from Gaza, Politico reports the Biden administration has privately told Israel that the U.S. would support Israel attacking Rafah as long as it did not carry out a large-scale invasion.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, we begin today’s show looking at how the U.S. media is covering Israel’s assault on Gaza with the acclaimed TV broadcaster Mehdi Hasan. In January, he announced he was leaving MSNBC after his shows were canceled. Mehdi was one of the most prominent Muslim voices on American television. In October, the news outlet Semafor reported MSNBC had reduced the roles of Hasan and two other Muslim broadcasters on the network, Ayman Mohyeldin and Ali Velshi, following the October 7th Hamas attack on Israel. Then, in November, MSNBC announced it was canceling Hasan’s show shortly after he conducted this interview with Mark Regev, an adviser to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. This is an excerpt.

MEHDI HASAN: You say Hamas’s numbers — I should point out, just pull up on the screen, in the last two major Gaza conflicts, 2009 and 2014, the Israeli military’s death tolls matched Hamas’s Health Ministry death tolls, so — and the U.N., human rights groups all agree that those numbers are credible. But look, your wider point is true.

MARK REGEV: Can I challenge that?

MEHDI HASAN: We shouldn’t —

MARK REGEV: Will you allow me —

MEHDI HASAN: We shouldn’t —

MARK REGEV: — to challenge that, please? Can I just challenge that?

MEHDI HASAN: Briefly, if you can.

MARK REGEV: I’d like to challenge that.

MEHDI HASAN: Briefly.

MARK REGEV: I’ll try to be as brief as you are, sir. Those numbers are provided by Hamas. There’s no independent verification. And secondly, more importantly, you have no idea how many of them are Hamas terrorists, combatants, and how many are civilians. Hamas would have you believe that they’re all civilians, that they’re all children.

And here we have to say something that isn’t said enough. Hamas, until now, we’re destroying their military machine, and with that, we’re eroding their control. But up until now, they’ve been in control of the Gaza Strip. And as a result, they control all the images coming out of Gaza. Have you seen one picture of a single dead Hamas terrorist in the fighting in Gaza? Not one.

MEHDI HASAN: Yeah, but I have —

MARK REGEV: Is that by accident, or is that —

MEHDI HASAN: But I have, Mark —

MARK REGEV: — because Hamas can control — Hamas can control the information coming out of Gaza?

MEHDI HASAN: Mark, but you asked me a question, and you said you would be brief. I haven’t. You’re right. But I have seen lots of children with my own lying eyes being pulled from the rubble. So —

MARK REGEV: Now, because they’re the pictures Hamas wants you to see. Exactly my point, Mehdi.

MEHDI HASAN: And also because they’re dead, Mark. Also —

MARK REGEV: They’re the pictures Hamas wants — no.

MEHDI HASAN: But they’re also people your government has killed. You accept that, right? You’ve killed children? Or do you deny that?

MARK REGEV: No, I do not. I do not. I do not. First of all, you don’t know how those people died, those children.

MEHDI HASAN: Oh wow.

AMY GOODMAN: “Oh wow,” Mehdi Hasan responded, interviewing Netanyahu adviser Mark Regev on MSNBC. Soon after, MSNBC announced that he was losing his shows. Since leaving the network, Mehdi Hasan has launched a new digital media company named Zeteo.

Mehdi, welcome back to Democracy Now! It’s great to have you with us. I want to start with that interview you did with Regev. After, you lost your two shows, soon after. Do you think that’s the reason those shows were canceled? Interviews like that?

MEHDI HASAN: You would have to ask MSNBC, Amy. And, Amy and Nermeen, thank you for having me on. It’s great to be back here after a few years away. Look, the advantage of not being at MSNBC anymore is I get to come on shows like this and talk to you all. You should get someone from MSNBC on and ask them why they canceled the shows, because I can’t answer that question. I wish I knew. But there we go.

The shows were canceled at the end of November. I quit at the beginning of January, because I wanted to have a platform of my own. I couldn’t really spend 2024, one of the most important news years of our lives — genocide in Gaza, fascism at the door here in America with elections — couldn’t really spend that being a guest anchor and a political analyst, which is what I was offered at MSNBC while I was staying there. I wanted to leave. I wanted to get my voice back. And that’s why I launched my own media company, as you mentioned, called Zeteo, which we’ve done a soft launch on and we’re going to launch properly next month. But I’m excited about all the opportunities ahead, the opportunity to do more interviews like the one I did with Mark Regev.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: So, Mehdi, could you explain Zeteo? First of all, what does it mean? And what is the gap in the U.S. media landscape that you hope to fill? You’ve been extremely critical of the U.S. media’s coverage of Gaza, saying, quite correctly, that the coverage has not been as consistent or clear as the last time we saw an invasion of this kind, though far less brutal, which was the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

MEHDI HASAN: Yeah, it’s a great question. So, on Zeteo, it’s an ancient Greek word, going back to Socrates and Plato, which means to seek out, to search, to inquire for the truth. And at a time when we live in a, some would say, post-truth society — or people on the right are attempting to turn it into a post-truth society — I thought that was an important endeavor to embark upon as a journalist, to go back to our roots.

In terms of why I launch it and the media space, look, there is a gap in the market, first of all, on the left for a company like this one. Not many progressives have pulled off a for-profit, subscription-based business, media business. We’ve seen it on the right, Nermeen, with, you know, Ben Shapiro’s Daily Wire and Bari Weiss’s The Free Press, and even Tucker Carlson has launched his own subscription-based platform since leaving Fox. And on the progressive space, we haven’t really done it. Now, of course, there are wonderful shows like Democracy Now! which are doing important, invaluable journalism on subjects like Gaza, on subjects like the climate. But across the media industry as a whole, sadly, in the U.S., the massive gap is there are not enough — I don’t know how to put it — bluntly, truth tellers, people who are willing to say — and when I say “truth tellers,” I don’t just mean, you know, truth in a conventional sense of saying what is true and what is false; I’m saying the language in which we talk about what is happening in the world today.

Too many of my colleagues in the media, unfortunately, hide behind lazy euphemisms, a both-sides journalism, the idea that you can’t say Donald Trump is racist because you don’t know what’s in his heart; you can’t say the Republican Party is going full fascist, even as they proclaim that they don’t believe in democracy as we conventionally understand it; we can’t say there’s a genocide in Gaza, even though the International Court of Justice says such a thing is plausible. You know, we run away from very blunt terms which help us understand world. And I want to treat American consumers of news, global consumers of news — it’s a global news organization which I’m founding — with some respect. Stop patronizing them. Tell them what is happening in the world, in a blunt way.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: So, Mehdi, talk about this. I mean, in your criticism of the U.S. media’s coverage, in particular, of Israel’s assault on Gaza — I mean, of course, you have condemned what happened, the Hamas attack in Israel on October 7th. You’ve also situated the attack in a broader historical frame, and you’ve received criticism for doing that. And in response, you’ve said, “Context is not causation,” and “Context is not justification.” So, could you explain why you think context, history, is so important, and the way in which this question is kind of elided in U.S. media coverage, not just of the Gaza crisis, but especially so now?

MEHDI HASAN: So, I did an interview with Piers Morgan this week. And if you watch Piers Morgan’s shows, he always asks his pro-Palestinian guests or anyone criticizing Israel, you know, “Condemn what happened on October 7th.” It’s all about October the 7th. And what happened on October 7th was barbarism. It was a tragedy. It was a terror attack. Civilians were killed. War crimes were carried out. Hostages were taken. And we should condemn it. Of course we should, as human beings, if nothing else.

But the world did not begin on October the 7th. The idea that the entire Middle East conflict, Israel-Palestine, the occupation, apartheid, can be reduced to October 7th is madness. And it’s not just me saying that. You talk to, you know, leading Israeli peace campaigners, even some leading Israeli generals, people like Shlomo Brom, who talk about having to understand the root causes of a people under occupation fighting for freedom. And it’s absurd to me that in our media industry people should try and run away from context. My former colleagues Ali Velshi and Ayman Mohyeldin, who Amy mentioned in the introduction, they were on air on October the 7th as news was coming in of the attacks, and they provided context, because they’re two anchors who really understand that part of the world. Ayman Mohyeldin is perhaps the only U.S. anchor who’s ever lived in Gaza. And they came under attack online from certain pro-Israel people for providing context. This idea that we should be embarrassed or ashamed or apologetic as journalists for providing context on one of the biggest stories in the world is madness. You cannot understand what is happening in the world unless we, unless you and I, unless journalists, broadcasters, are explaining to our viewers and our listeners and our readers why things are happening, where forces are coming from, why people are behaving the way they do. And I know America is a country of amnesiacs, but we cannot keep acting as if the world just began yesterday.

AMY GOODMAN: I want to ask you about a piece in The Intercept — you also used to report for The Intercept — the headline, “In Internal Meeting, Christiane Amanpour Confronts CNN Brass About ‘Double Standards’ on Israel Coverage.” It’s a really interesting piece. They were confronting the executives, and “One issue that came up,” says The Intercept, “repeatedly is CNN’s longtime process for routing almost all coverage relating to Israel and Palestine through the network’s Jerusalem bureau. As The Intercept reported in January, the protocol — which has existed for years but was expanded and rebranded as SecondEyes last summer — slows down reporting on Gaza and filters news about the war through journalists in Jerusalem who operate under the shadow of Israel’s military censor.” And then it quotes Christiane Amanpour, identified in a recording of that meeting. She said, “You’ve heard from me, you’ve heard my, you know, real distress with SecondEyes — changing copy, double standards, and all the rest,” Amanpour said. The significance of this and what we see, Mehdi? You know, I’m not talking Fox right now. On MSNBC —

MEHDI HASAN: Yes.

AMY GOODMAN: — and on CNN, you rarely see Palestinians interviewed in extended discussions.

MEHDI HASAN: So, I think there’s a few issues there, Amy. Number one, first of all, we should recognize that Christiane Amanpour has done some very excellent coverage of Gaza for CNN in this conflict. She’s had some very powerful interviews and very important guests on. So, credit to Christiane during this conflict. Number two —

AMY GOODMAN: International —

MEHDI HASAN: — I think U.S. media organizations —

AMY GOODMAN: — I just wanted to say, particularly on CNN International, which is often not seen —

MEHDI HASAN: Very good point.

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: — on CNN domestic.

MEHDI HASAN: Very good — very good point, Amy. Touché.

The second point, I would say, is U.S. media organizations, as a whole, are engaging in journalistic malpractice by not informing viewers, listeners, readers that a lot of their coverage out of Israel and the Occupied Territories is coming under the shadow of an Israeli military censor. How many Americans understand or even know about the Israeli military censor, about how much information is controlled? We barely understand that Western journalists are kept out of Gaza, or if when they go in, they’re embedded with Israeli military forces and limited to what they can say and do. So I think we should talk about that in a country which kind of prides itself on the First Amendment and free speech and a free press. We should understand the way in which information comes out of the Occupied Territories, in particular from Gaza.

And the third point, I would say, is, yeah, Palestinian voices not being on American television or in American print is one of the biggest problems when it comes to our coverage of this conflict. When we talk about why the media is structurally biased towards one party in this conflict, the more powerful party, the occupier, we have to remember that this is one of the reasons. Why are Palestinians dehumanized in our media? This is one of the reasons. We don’t let people speak. That’s what leads to dehumanization. That’s what leads to bias.

We understand it at home when it comes to, for example, Black voices. In recent years, media organizations have tried to take steps to improve diversity on air, when it comes to on-air talent, when it comes to on-air guests, when it comes to balancing panels. We get that we need underrepresented communities to be able to speak. But when it comes to foreign conflicts, we still don’t seem to have made that calculation.

There was a study done a few years ago of op-eds in The New York Times and The Washington Post on the subject of Israel-Palestine from 1970 to, I think it was, 2000-and-something, and it was like 2% of all op-eds in the Times and 1% in the Post were written by Palestinians, which is a shocking statistic. We deny these people a voice, and then we wonder why people don’t sympathize with their plight or don’t — aren’t, you know, marching in the street — well, they are marching in the streets — but in bigger numbers. Why America is OK and kind of, you know, blind to the fact that we are complicit in a genocide of these people? Because we don’t hear from these people.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: Well, Mehdi, I mean, explain why that’s especially relevant in this instance, because journalists have not been permitted access to Gaza, so there is no reporting going on on the ground that’s being shown here. I mean, dozens and dozens of journalists have signed a letter asking Israel and Egypt to allow journalists access into Gaza. So, if you could talk about that, why it’s especially important to hear from Palestinian voices here?

MEHDI HASAN: Well, for a start, Nermeen, much of the imagery we see on our screens here or in our newspapers are sanitized images. We don’t see the full level of the destruction. And when we try and understand, well, why are young people — why is there such a generational gap when it comes to the polling on Gaza, on ceasefire, why are young people so much more antiwar than their elder peers, part of the reason is that young people are on TikTok or Instagram and seeing a much less sanitized version of this war, of Israel’s bombardment. They are seeing babies being pulled from the rubble, limbs missing. They are seeing hospitals being — you know, hospitals carrying out procedures without anesthetic. They are seeing just absolute brutality, the kind of stuff that U.N. humanitarian chiefs are saying we haven’t seen in this world for 50 years.

And that’s the problem, right? If we’re sanitizing the coverage, Americans aren’t being told, really, aren’t being informed, are, again, missing context on what is happening on the ground. And, of course, Israel, by keeping Western journalists out, makes it even easier for those images to be blocked, and therefore you have Palestinian — brave Palestinian journalists on the ground trying to film, trying to document their own genocide, streaming it to our phones. And we’ve seen over a hundred of them killed over the last five months. That is not an accident. That is not a coincidence. Israel wants to stamp out independent voices, stamp out any kind of coverage of its own genocidal behavior.

And therefore, again, you’re able to have a debate in this country where the political debate is completely disconnected to the public debate, and the public debate is completely misinformed. I’m amazed, Nermeen, when you look at the polling, that there’s a majority in favor of a ceasefire, that half of all Democrats say this is a genocide. Americans are saying that to pollsters despite not even getting the full picture. Can you imagine what those numbers would look like if they actually saw what was happening on the ground?

NERMEEN SHAIKH: Well, I want to go to what is unfolding right now in Gaza. You said in a recent interview that in the past Israel was, quote, “mowing the lawn,” but now the Netanyahu government’s intention is to erase the population of Gaza. So let’s go to what Prime Minister Netanyahu said about the invasion of Rafah, saying it would go ahead and would last weeks, not months. He was speaking to Politico on Sunday.

PRIME MINISTER BENJAMIN NETANYAHU: We’re not going to leave them. You know, I have a red line. You know what the red line is? That October 7th doesn’t happen again, never happens again. And to do that, we have to complete the destruction of the Hamas terrorist army. … We’re very close to victory. It’s close at hand. We’ve destroyed three-quarters of Hamas fighting terrorist battalions, and we’re close to finishing the last part in Rafah, and we’re not going to give it up. … Once we begin the intense action of eradicating the Hamas terrorist battalions in Rafah, it’s a matter of weeks and not months.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: So, Mehdi, your response to what Netanyahu said and what the Israelis have proposed as a safe place for Gazans to go — namely, humanitarian islands?

MEHDI HASAN: So, number one, when you hear Netanyahu speak, Nermeen, doesn’t it remind you of George Bush in kind of 2002, 2003? It’s very — you know, invoking 9/11 to justify every atrocity, claiming that you’re trying to protect the country, when you, yourself, your idiocy and your incompetency, is what led to the attacks. You know, George Bush was unable to prevent 9/11, and then used 9/11 to justify every atrocity, even though his incompetence helped allow 9/11 to happen. And I feel the same way: Netanyahu allowed the worst terror attack, the worst massacre in Israel to happen on his watch. Many of his own, you know, generals, many of his own people blame him for this. And so, it’s rich to hear him saying, “My aim is to stop this from happening again.” Well, you couldn’t stop it from happening the first time, and now you’re killing innocent Palestinians under the pretense that this is national security.

Number two, again George Bush-like, claiming that the war is nearly done, mission is nearly accomplished, that’s nonsense. No serious observer believes that Hamas is finished or that Israel has won some total victory. A member of Netanyahu’s own war cabinet said recently, “Anyone who says you can absolutely defeat Hamas is telling tall tales, is lying.” That was a colleague of Netanyahu’s, in government, who said that.

And number three, the red line on Rafah that Biden suppposedly set down and that Netanyahu is now mocking, saying, “My own red line is to do the opposite,” what on Earth is Joe Biden doing in allowing Benjamin Netanyahu to humiliate him in this way with this invasion of Rafah, even after he said he opposes it? I mean, it’s one thing to leak stuff —

AMY GOODMAN: Mehdi —

MEHDI HASAN: — over a few months —

AMY GOODMAN: — let’s go to Biden speaking on MSNBC. He’s being interviewed by your former colleague Jonathan Capehart, as he was being questioned about Benjamin Netanyahu and saying he’s hurting Israel more than helping Israel.

PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN: He has a right to defend Israel, a right to continue to pursue Hamas. But he must, he must, he must pay more attention to the innocent lives being lost as a consequence of the actions taken. He’s hurting — in my view, he’s hurting Israel more than helping Israel by making the rest of the world — it’s contrary to what Israel stands for. And I think it’s a big mistake. So I want to see a ceasefire.

AMY GOODMAN: And he talked about a, well, kind of a red line. If you can address what Biden is saying and what he proposed in the State of the Union, this pier, to get more aid in, and also the dropping — the airdropping of food, which recently killed five Palestinians because it crushed them to death, and the humanitarian groups, United Nations saying these airdrops, the pier come nowhere near being able to provide the aid that’s needed, at the same time, and the reason they’re doing all of this, is because Israel is using U.S. bombs and artillery to attack the Palestinians and these aid trucks?

MEHDI HASAN: Yeah, it’s just so bizarre, the idea that you could drop bombs, on the one hand, and then drop aid, on the other, and you’re paying for both, and then your aid ends up killing people, too. It’s like some kind of dark Onion headline. It’s just beyond parody. It’s beyond belief.

And as for the pier, as you say, it does not come anywhere near to adequately addressing the needs of the Palestinian people, in terms of the sheer scale of the suffering, half a million people on the brink of famine, over a million people displaced. Four out of five of the hungriest people in the world, according to the World Food Programme, are in Gaza right now. The idea that this pier would, A, address the scale of the suffering, and, B, in time — I mean, it’s going to take time to do this. What happens to the Palestinians who literally starve to death, including children, while this pier is being built? Finally, I would say, there’s reporting in the Israeli press, Amy, that I’ve seen that suggests that the pier idea comes from Netanyahu, that the Israeli government are totally fine with this pier, because it allows them still to control land and air access into Gaza, which is what they’ve always controlled and which in this war they’ve monopolized.

The idea that the United States of America, the world’s only superpower, cannot tell its ally, “You know what? We’re going to put aid into Gaza because we want to, and you’re not going to stop us, especially since we’re the ones arming you,” is bizarre. It’s something I think Biden will never be able to get past or live down. It’s a stain on his record, on America’s conscience. The idea that we’re arming a country that’s engaged in a “plausible genocide,” to quote the ICJ, is bad enough. That we can’t even get our own aid in, while they’re bombing with our bombs, is just madness. And by the way, it’s also illegal. Under U.S. law, you cannot provide weaponry to a country which is blocking U.S. aid. And by the way, it’s not me saying they’re blocking U.S. aid. U.S. government officials have said, “Yes, the Israeli government blocked us from sending flour in,” for example.

NERMEEN SHAIKH: So, Mehdi, let’s go to the regional response to this assault on Gaza that’s been unfolding with the kind of violence and tens of thousands of deaths of Palestinians, as we’ve reported. Now, what has — how has the Arab and Muslim world responded to what’s going on? Egypt, of course, has repeatedly said that it does not want displaced Palestinians crossing its border. The most powerful Muslim countries, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the Emirates, if you can talk about how they’ve responded? And then the Axis — the so-called Axis of Resistance — Houthis, Hezbollah, etc. — how they have been trying to disrupt this war, or at least make the backers of Israel pay a price for it?

MEHDI HASAN: So, I hear people saying, “Oh, we’re disappointed in the response from the Arab countries.” The problem with the word “disappointment” is it implies you had any expectations to begin with. I certainly didn’t. Arab countries have never had the Palestinians’ backs. The Arab — quote-unquote, “Arab street” has always been very pro-Palestinian. But the autocratic, the despotic, the dictatorial rulers of much of the Arab world have never really had the interests of the Palestinian people at their heart, going back right to 1948, when, you know, Arab countries attacked Israel to push it into the sea, but, actually, as we know from historians like Avi Shlaim, were not doing that at all, and that some of them, like Jordan, had done deals with Israel behind the scenes. So, look, Arab countries have never really prioritized the Palestinian people or their needs or their freedom. And so, when you see some of these statements that come out of the Arab world at times like this, you know, you have to take them with a shovel of salt, not just a grain.

Also, I would point out the hypocrisy here on all sides in the region. You have countries like Saudi Arabia and the UAE, which were involved in a brutal assault on Yemen for many years, carried out very similar acts to Israel in Gaza in terms of blockades, starvation, malnourishment of the Yemeni children, in terms of bombing of refugee camps and hospitals and kids and school buses. That all happened in Yemen. Arab countries did that, let’s just be clear about that, things that they criticize Israel for doing now. And, of course, Iran, which sets itself up as a champion of the Palestinan people, when Bashar al-Assad was killing many of his own people, including Palestinian refugees, in places like the al-Yarmouk refugee camp, Iran and Russia, by the way, were both perfectly happy to help arm and support Assad as he did that. So, you know, spare me some of the grandiose statements from Middle East countries, from Arab nations to Iran, on all of it. There’s a lot of hypocrisy to go around.

Very few countries in the world, especially in that region, actually have Palestinian interests at heart. If they did, we would have a very different geopolitical scene. There is reporting, Nermeen, that a lot of these governments, like Saudi Arabia, privately are telling Israel, “Finish the job. Get rid of them. We don’t like Hamas, either. Get rid of them,” and that Saudis actually want to do a deal with Israel once this war is over, just as they were on course to do, apparently, according to the Biden administration. We know that other Arab countries already signed the, quote-unquote, “Abraham Accords” with Israel on Trump’s watch.

AMY GOODMAN: I wanted to ask you about the number of dead Palestinian journalists and also the new U.N. investigation that just accused Israel of breaking international law over the killing of the Reuters video journalist Issam Abdallah in southern Lebanon. On October 13th, an Israeli tank opened fire on him and a group of other journalists. He had just set up a live stream on the border in southern Lebanon, so that all his colleagues at Reuters and others saw him blown up. The report stating, quote, “The firing at civilians, in this instance clearly identifiable journalists, constitutes a violation of … international law.” And it’s not just Issam in southern Lebanon. Well over a hundred Palestinian journalists in Gaza have died. We’ve never seen anything like the concentration of numbers of journalists killed in any other conflict or conflicts combined recently. Can you talk about the lack of outrage of other major news organizations and what Israel is doing here? Do you think they’re being directly targeted, one after another, wearing those well-known “press” flak jackets? It looks like we just lost audio to Mehdi Hasan.

MEHDI HASAN: Amy, I can — I can hear you, Amy, very faintly.

AMY GOODMAN: Oh, OK. So —

MEHDI HASAN: I’m going to answer your question, if you can still hear me.

AMY GOODMAN: Great. We can hear you perfectly.

MEHDI HASAN: So, you’re very faint to me. So, while I speak, if someone want to fix the volume in my ear. Let me answer your question about journalists.

It is an absolute tragedy and a scandal, what has happened to journalists in Gaza, that we have seen so many deaths in Gaza. And the real scandal, Amy, is that Western media, a lot of my colleagues here in the U.S. media, have not sounded the alarm, have not called out Israel for what it’s done. It’s outrageous that so many of our fellow colleagues can be killed in Gaza while reporting, while at home, losing family members, and yet there’s not a huge global outcry. When Wael al-Dahdouh, who we just saw on the screen, from Al Jazeera, loses his immediate family members and carries on reporting for Al Jazeera Arabic, why is he not on every front page in the world? Why is he not a hero? Why is he not sitting down with Oprah Winfrey? I feel like, you know, when Evan Gershkovich from The Wall Street Journal is wrongly imprisoned in Russia, we all campaign for Evan to be released. When Ukrainian journalists are killed, we all speak out and are angry about it. But when Palestinian journalists are killed on a level we’ve never seen before, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists, where is the outcry here in the West over the killing of them? We claim to care about a free press. We claim to oppose countries that crack down on a free press, on journalism. We say journalism is not a crime. But then I don’t hear the outrage from my colleagues here at this barbarism in Gaza, where journalists are being killed in record numbers.

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MAGA ABSURD

Posted in Uncategorized by @honestcharlie on March 13, 2024

Things have been a bit looney on the net today, so sending this in care:

GODOT NEVER CAME — SENT TRUMP INSTEAD
͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­

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MAGA ABSURD

GODOT NEVER CAME — SENT TRUMP INSTEAD

AbsurdTimes
Mar 12
https%3A%2F%2Fbucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F3649189e-c8aa-436e-b13a-366f4f0788c7_48x48.jpeg

THE ABSURD TIMES

The Week?

Or The Rise and Fall of Insanity

By

Absurd Times

For some time now, things have deteriorated to the point where even pondering or asking questions about them simply leads to more ennui. Even the point of outrage or anger has retreated into the safe confines of indifference to escape cognizance of them. A few examples of unprecedented idiocy should be sufficient to illustrate.

Living in a country where Donald Trump has recently been President, and who is campaigning again to be President (he had been interrupted) to escape conviction on 91 Felonies (he is appealing recent convictions) is unnerving at the very least, but a simple glance at the history of this country leaves it Absurd.

About two decades ago when this publication began (such as it was) many events were disgusting and vile, but we at least knew how greedy and self-serving the powerful forces that molded this country were. At this point, stupidities abound to the literal meaning of the title of this newsletter. That meaning began with a brief nod to Camus and an attempt to view the country from the point of view of Critical Theory, a school soon named the Frankfurt School. THE ECLIPSE OF REASON was a cornerstone of the system which made a profound impact on several fields, but the state of perfidity has morphed beyond recognition since. Let us review some of the glaringly absurd developments that are accepted as more or less routine in the first quarter of the 21st Century. The last idiocy of this caliber appeared with the photograph of Harry Truman holding up the headlines of the Chicago Tribune that pronounced DEWEY WINS! The paper was so biased in favor of Republicans that they were certain that a world without a President Dewey was unthinkable.

We are faced now with something even more absurd and insane today, but there is almost no realization of it. The anchors simply sit there, point out the “mistake,” perhaps chuckle a bit, and then move on. Look back into history and try to find anyone as ridiculous as the (pardon the expression) Republican candidate for President ridiculed, or thought he did, his one remaining opponent. This strange man who becomes stranger by the day felt a need to attack the woman, Haley, the ex-Governor of South Caroline, whom HE APPOINTED AS Ambassador to the United Nations (the only federal office she has held) as responsible for the January 6 insurrection when he was crushed in the election. Every participant there apparently said something to the effect that they were “invited” by President, Trump.

It is useless to fix the number of minutes he spoke. Suffice to say one particular part of his linguistic offal consisted of accusations of Nicky Hayley not acting as she was required by law. Now this is difficult to believe, or was in centuries past, but he then went on to describe in a somewhat fuzzy manner Nancy Pelosi, the ex-Speaker of the House, an extremely competent one at that. He has to have known that as he often makes jokes about her husband being attacked by a MAGA nut with a hammer in San Francisco. In other words, he somehow conflated Nicky Haley and Nancy Pelosi, two women with little in common except their gender. Perhaps that is enough for him as he now owes over ten million dollars to another woman for his remarks about her. Even Nixon and Harding knew what they were doing. Trump is far too preposterous to be taken seriously, yet it is highly likely that he will be the Presidential candidate for that Political party. Perhaps someone will revive the Whigs?

Of course, there is more, and what would naturally happen to the poor and downtrodden Israelis? Attacked, they were, just in time to anticipate their holy day of Halloween. Israel needs its own newsletter attention and this discussion of the quality of American Leadership will suffice for now. Israel needs a fresh analysis.

One other issue has pervaded the news media recently: RAPE. Quite obviously, soldiers for countries we have decided to dislike do a great deal of raping. Back a year or so ago, Russian soldiers were rapping Ukranian females as a matter of course. Bad Russians – and then they hide in the bushes – remember that? Well, now Israel decided to try the approach since it has killed over 30,000 civilians since October 7th and the world decided that was not fair. So, they pointed out that the Palestinians raped Jews. Incredible, but think about all the poor raped Jewess! Of course, we have to murder them – in the U.S. we protect life even when it is a frozen embryo.

But that is for another time. We need to get this out as it is getting too heavy now. Just be careful not to get raped by the enemy.

AbsurdTimes’s Newsletter is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

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MAGA ABSURD

Posted in Uncategorized by @honestcharlie on March 13, 2024

GODOT NEVER CAME — SENT TRUMP INSTEAD
͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­

View in browser

MAGA ABSURD

GODOT NEVER CAME — SENT TRUMP INSTEAD

AbsurdTimes
Mar 12
https%3A%2F%2Fbucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F3649189e-c8aa-436e-b13a-366f4f0788c7_48x48.jpeg

THE ABSURD TIMES

The Week?

Or The Rise and Fall of Insanity

By

Absurd Times

For some time now, things have deteriorated to the point where even pondering or asking questions about them simply leads to more ennui. Even the point of outrage or anger has retreated into the safe confines of indifference to escape cognizance of them. A few examples of unprecedented idiocy should be sufficient to illustrate.

Living in a country where Donald Trump has recently been President, and who is campaigning again to be President (he had been interrupted) to escape conviction on 91 Felonies (he is appealing recent convictions) is unnerving at the very least, but a simple glance at the history of this country leaves it Absurd.

About two decades ago when this publication began (such as it was) many events were disgusting and vile, but we at least knew how greedy and self-serving the powerful forces that molded this country were. At this point, stupidities abound to the literal meaning of the title of this newsletter. That meaning began with a brief nod to Camus and an attempt to view the country from the point of view of Critical Theory, a school soon named the Frankfurt School. THE ECLIPSE OF REASON was a cornerstone of the system which made a profound impact on several fields, but the state of perfidity has morphed beyond recognition since. Let us review some of the glaringly absurd developments that are accepted as more or less routine in the first quarter of the 21st Century. The last idiocy of this caliber appeared with the photograph of Harry Truman holding up the headlines of the Chicago Tribune that pronounced DEWEY WINS! The paper was so biased in favor of Republicans that they were certain that a world without a President Dewey was unthinkable.

We are faced now with something even more absurd and insane today, but there is almost no realization of it. The anchors simply sit there, point out the “mistake,” perhaps chuckle a bit, and then move on. Look back into history and try to find anyone as ridiculous as the (pardon the expression) Republican candidate for President ridiculed, or thought he did, his one remaining opponent. This strange man who becomes stranger by the day felt a need to attack the woman, Haley, the ex-Governor of South Caroline, whom HE APPOINTED AS Ambassador to the United Nations (the only federal office she has held) as responsible for the January 6 insurrection when he was crushed in the election. Every participant there apparently said something to the effect that they were “invited” by President, Trump.

It is useless to fix the number of minutes he spoke. Suffice to say one particular part of his linguistic offal consisted of accusations of Nicky Hayley not acting as she was required by law. Now this is difficult to believe, or was in centuries past, but he then went on to describe in a somewhat fuzzy manner Nancy Pelosi, the ex-Speaker of the House, an extremely competent one at that. He has to have known that as he often makes jokes about her husband being attacked by a MAGA nut with a hammer in San Francisco. In other words, he somehow conflated Nicky Haley and Nancy Pelosi, two women with little in common except their gender. Perhaps that is enough for him as he now owes over ten million dollars to another woman for his remarks about her. Even Nixon and Harding knew what they were doing. Trump is far too preposterous to be taken seriously, yet it is highly likely that he will be the Presidential candidate for that Political party. Perhaps someone will revive the Whigs?

Of course, there is more, and what would naturally happen to the poor and downtrodden Israelis? Attacked, they were, just in time to anticipate their holy day of Halloween. Israel needs its own newsletter attention and this discussion of the quality of American Leadership will suffice for now. Israel needs a fresh analysis.

One other issue has pervaded the news media recently: RAPE. Quite obviously, soldiers for countries we have decided to dislike do a great deal of raping. Back a year or so ago, Russian soldiers were rapping Ukranian females as a matter of course. Bad Russians – and then they hide in the bushes – remember that? Well, now Israel decided to try the approach since it has killed over 30,000 civilians since October 7th and the world decided that was not fair. So, they pointed out that the Palestinians raped Jews. Incredible, but think about all the poor raped Jewess! Of course, we have to murder them – in the U.S. we protect life even when it is a frozen embryo.

But that is for another time. We need to get this out as it is getting too heavy now. Just be careful not to get raped by the enemy.

AbsurdTimes’s Newsletter is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

Subscribed

Thank you for reading AbsurdTimes’s Newsletter. This post is public so feel free to share it.

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LEAP iT

Posted in Uncategorized by @honestcharlie on February 29, 2024

THE ABSURD TIMES MEDIA SERIES – WHY NOBODY HERE CAN KNOW WHAT IS HAPPENING. PRIME DIRECTIV E MAINSTREAM UNITED STATES by ABSURD TIMES Our mainstream media has almost returned to normal. After October 7, the board of Directors of XFINITY, DISNEY, AND WHOEVER OWNS CBS, had their meeting. The media would be controlled as always and the meeting was purely concerned with maintaining profit margin. Meanwhile, immediately NBC (Xfinity) took every reporter who knew what was really going on off the air (except Richard Engels
͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­

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AbsurdTimes
Feb 29
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THE ABSURD TIMES

MEDIA SERIES – WHY NOBODY HERE CAN KNOW WHAT IS HAPPENING.

PRIME DIRECTIV

E

MAINSTREAM UNITED STATES

by

ABSURD TIMES

Our mainstream media has almost returned to normal. After October 7, the board of Directors of XFINITY, DISNEY, AND WHOEVER OWNS CBS, had their meeting. The media would be controlled as always and the meeting was purely concerned with maintaining profit margin. Meanwhile, immediately NBC (Xfinity) took every reporter who knew what was really going on off the air (except Richard Engels (his name sounds Jewish so maybe it won’t hurt). Aipac, you know. Fox has its own board and they will make their own decisions, probably also based on profit margins, but they can deal with that themselves. In other words (it’s not my problem – talk to Fox). If they don’t properly distort the news, viewers migrate to even more warped channels.

Ron DeSantis came up with some policies that DISNEY didn’t like. Disney owns ABC. He never figured out why his polls went so low. BTW: in case you wonder, if you live in a large city, one that started television, you will notice that ABC always has a circle with a 7 in it. Ever wonder why? Yes, I’ll tell you. Back then, the presumption was that the military would own channels one through six. ABC moved quickly as in the VHF band the lower the wavelength the greater the reach, and opted for Channel seven. Well, our military is not that into programming and, as idiocy faded a bit, channel 6 was put aside for FM broadcasting. When the channels started to get cluttered (we are still land-based now) VHF opened up. Fox had to settle for 32 in Chicago and there is no way the other stations will relent.

Now, however, Ted Turner in Atlanta, who inherited channel seventeen, started to use satellites and started CNN.

Well, jump forward, and we will come back to some of this in later editions when needed, but the capitalist juggernaut continued. The GigaCorporations had to maintain their profit margin, which meant they had to sell advertisements, and they were hampered, particularly at the largest level, by another commodity – the audience. Now to focus on the largest: MSNBS has the most educated and hence aware audience of all of them. It is that audience that the board has to sell to the advertisers, a prime audience. So, the concern is to retain as much of that audience as possible while not offending the profit margin. At first, this meant not showing scenes from Gaza nor commentary against Israel or our 4 billion a year gift to it. It also meant full support for Netenyahoo who wants to continue this war as long as possible to avoid indictments in their Supreme Court (which he was unable to dismantle). He is now so afraid of court that he will continue this aggression as long as he can. The board in charge of profit margin continues to monitor and as the more alert members of its audience become more anti-Israel and defiant of Biden, the coverage changes to keep that audience.

Fox’s audience is the ‘BOOBOISE’, the mentality that enrolls in Trump University, build the wall, etc., smaller contributions and tennis shoes (now called ‘sneakers’) at $399/pair. That audience at the (sneaker-con?) showed a mixed reaction, of course. Not only does it mainly consider perfection as Michael Jordan but also much of it likes Taylor Swift.

At any rate, that is the sort of values at work in the media. Further media articles will focus on individual topics and what other countries face with censorship.

Meanwhile, we need to see what happens with Assange. Didn’t we used to have a First Amendment?

MEDIA SWALLOWED

BY

Absurd Times

Well, I have had enough of this inane preoccupation with our MEDIA (SUCH AS IT IS) that further examination seems to reflect what a wise Professor of Political Science once said vociferously and often: WHO CARES?

I should wrap this up as quickly as possible by asking for help for a number of reliable (oh my) sources, but mainly my own observations.

Too many other events are going on to bother with this crap

Russia: I’m told that all media is blocked or closely monitored.

Israel: I’m told that most Israelis have never seen coverage of the slaughter and disease in Gaza. Only idiotic stuff by younger IDF is seen.

Finally, an example of how it works: on an international source: A woman hostage was released to Israel, and she said “It was hell on earth. The motorcycle was horrific. It must be said, however, that once there we were treated and lived as well as our capturers. We ate the same food, and slept in the same conditions.”

The same hostage’s statement appeared in mainstream media in the U.S., but in a shorter version “It was hell on earth.”

Well, that’s enough of that. I rushed this out because it is a

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FOCUS ON MEDIA.

Posted in Uncategorized by @honestcharlie on February 22, 2024

UNITED STATES VALUES
͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­͏ ‌   ­

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FOCUS ON MEDIA.

UNITED STATES VALUES

AbsurdTimes
Feb 21
https%3A%2F%2Fbucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F3649189e-c8aa-436e-b13a-366f4f0788c7_48x48.jpeg

THE ABSURD TIMES

Illustration: Israel before 2000 — what is it like now?

MEDIA SERIES – WHY NOBODY HERE CAN KNOW WHAT IS HAPPENING.

PRIME DIRECTIVE

MAINSTREAM UNITED STATES

by

ABSURD TIMES

Our mainstream media has almost returned to normal. After October 7, the board of Directors of XFINITY, DISNEY, AND WHOEVER OWNS CBS, had their meeting. The media would be controlled as always and the meeting was purely concerned with maintaining profit margin. Meanwhile, immediately NBC (Xfinity) took every reporter who knew what was really going on off the air (except Richard Engels (his name sounds Jewish so maybe it won’t hurt). Aipac, you know. Fox has its own board and they will make their own decisions, probably also based on profit margins, but they can deal with that themselves. In other words (it’s not my problem – talk to Fox).

Ron DeSantis came up with some policies that DISNEY didn’t like. Disney owns ABC. He never figured out why his polls went so low. BTW: in case you wonder, if you live in a large city, one that started television, you will notice that ABC always has a circle with a 7 in it. Ever wonder why? Yes, I’ll tell you. Back then, the presumption was that the military would own channels one through six. ABC moved quickly as in the VHF band the lower the wavelength the greater the reach, and opted for Channel Seven. Well, our military is not that into programming, and, as idiocy faded a bit, channel 6 was put aside for FM broadcasting. When the channels started to get cluttered (we are still land-based now) VHF opened up. Fox had to settle for 32 in Chicago and there is no way the other stations will relent.

Now, however, Ted Turner in Atlanta, who inherited channel seventeen, started to use satellites and started CNN.

Well, jump forward, and we will come back to some of this in later editions when needed, but the capitalist juggernaut continued. The GigaCorporations had to maintain their profit margin, which meant they had to sell advertisements, and they were hampered, particularly at the largest level, by another commodity – the audience. Now to focus on the largest: MSNBS has the most educated and hence aware audience of all of them. It is that audience that the board has to sell to the advertisers, a prime audience. So, the concern is to retain as much of that audience as possible while not offending the profit margin. At first, this meant not showing scenes from Gaza nor commentary against Israel or our 4 billion a year gift to it. It also meant full support for Netenyahoo who wants to continue this war as long as possible to avoid indictments in their Supreme Court (which he was unable to dismantle). He is now so afraid of court that he will continue this aggression as long as he can. The board in charge of profit margin continues to monitor and as the more alert members of its audience become more anti-Israel and defiant of Biden, the coverage changes to keep that audience.

Fox’s audience is the ‘BOOBOISE’, the mentality that enrolls in Trump University, build the wall, etc., smaller contributions and tennis shoes (now called ‘sneakers’) at $399/pair. That audience at the (sneaker-con?) showed a mixed reaction, of course. Not only does it mainly consider perfection as Michael Jordan but also much of it likes Taylor Swift.

At any rate, that is the sort of value at work in the media. Further media articles will focus on individual topics and what other countries face with censorship.

Meanwhile, we need to see what happens with Assange. Didn’t we use to have a First Amendment?

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